Smile When the Raindrops Fall: The Story of Charley ChaseAt the age of ten, Charley Chase was singing and dancing on the street corners of Baltimore. Charley eventually became a local vaudeville attraction, but Baltimore could not contain the ambitious young man. After a brief, but memorable, stint in New York, Chase finally landed in Los Angeles in 1912. His timely arrival coincided with the birth of the film industry, and Charley Chase became a major force in the shaping of motion picture comedy. A human dynamo, Charley's talent and creativity seemed inexhaustible. As a writer/director/actor, Charley started out at Mack Sennett's Keystone Studios. Working with Fatty Arbuckle and Charlie Chaplin, Chase quickly became one of Sennett's top directors. Later, at other studios, he directed, then starred in his own series of funny and inventive two-reelers. Behind the scenes, Charley Chase was instrumental in shaping the careers of both Laurel & Hardy and The Three Stooges. Chase's personal life paralleled his film work. At first he was energetic and optimistic—as was the infant film industry itself. As the movie grew up, Charley got older too. Chase's career, marred by family problems and alcoholism, mirrored the decline of the short film. Includes photographs and a detailed filmography. |
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Page 44
... Snub Pollard had provided splendid support in the Lloyd films and was rewarded with his own series in 1919. A small staff of actors , writers and directors were added to the roster , and the studio was well on its way . As the studio ...
... Snub Pollard had provided splendid support in the Lloyd films and was rewarded with his own series in 1919. A small staff of actors , writers and directors were added to the roster , and the studio was well on its way . As the studio ...
Page 45
... Snub Pollard and Ernie Morrison . . . and they only have one phone , one phone on that whole lot . Can you imagine ! I was running back and forth giving messages and taking messages from people all over the studio . Although it wasn't ...
... Snub Pollard and Ernie Morrison . . . and they only have one phone , one phone on that whole lot . Can you imagine ! I was running back and forth giving messages and taking messages from people all over the studio . Although it wasn't ...
Page 46
... Snub Pollard comedy Cut Your Cards , re- leased on June 12 , 1920. The following year , Roach was looking for an- other comedy unit to add to his stable and approached Jimmy about star- ring in his own series . Jimmy applied dark eye ...
... Snub Pollard comedy Cut Your Cards , re- leased on June 12 , 1920. The following year , Roach was looking for an- other comedy unit to add to his stable and approached Jimmy about star- ring in his own series . Jimmy applied dark eye ...
Page 50
... Snub Pollard in a series of one - reelers . Born Harry Frazer in Australia , Snub was a member of an Australian vaudeville troupe called Pollard's Lilliputians . When the act broke up after a brief U.S. tour , the young comic retained ...
... Snub Pollard in a series of one - reelers . Born Harry Frazer in Australia , Snub was a member of an Australian vaudeville troupe called Pollard's Lilliputians . When the act broke up after a brief U.S. tour , the young comic retained ...
Page 51
... Snub is punched in the nose . The next shot has the camera rapidly track with Snub , as he reels backward from the ... Pollard series was successful at the box office , and in 1922 Snub graduated from one - reelers to the longer double ...
... Snub is punched in the nose . The next shot has the camera rapidly track with Snub , as he reels backward from the ... Pollard series was successful at the box office , and in 1922 Snub graduated from one - reelers to the longer double ...
Contents
Its a Lovely Day for Something | 135 |
Sons of the Desert | 143 |
On the Wrong Trek | 153 |
Have you ever seen anything so Beautiful | 159 |
Columbia | 163 |
A Firehouse Mouse | 169 |
On the Hill | 179 |
Epilogue | 185 |
57 | |
Fancy Pants and Droopy Drawers | 67 |
Jimmy Jump and Leo the Lawyer | 73 |
OneTake Charley | 81 |
An Occupational Hazard | 93 |
The Talkers and a Severe Cold | 105 |
Gangway Charley | 117 |
Rough Seas | 129 |
A Note about the Films | 187 |
Charley Chase Filmography | 191 |
Sony Credits | 239 |
Bibliography | 243 |
Index | 247 |
About the Authors | 255 |
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Common terms and phrases
actors Angeles Anita Garvin Art Lloyd Arthur Seid BeBe Billy Gilbert Billy West Bud Jamison Chaplin Charles Parrott Charley Chase Charley's Charlie Hall Chase and Hugh Chase comedies Chase series Chester Conklin Columbia comedian Del Lord Dialogue by H. M. director Edgar Kennedy Edited by Richard Edited by William Elmer Raguse Elwood Ullman feature Filmed circa funny gags girls H. M. Walker Hal Roach Harold Lloyd Harry Bernard Harry Bowen Henderson Hollywood Hugh McCollum James Finlayson James Parrott Jimmy Parrott Jimmy's Keystone Leo McCarey Leo Willis Love Marvin Hatley movie Music Nick Cogley Noah Young NOTE Oliver Hardy one-reelers Paul Parrott performed Photographed by Art play Polly produced ranch Recording Engineer reels Richard Currier Richard Jones Roach lot Roach Studios scene Snub Pollard Song Stan Laurel star Stooges Story and screenplay Supervised by F theater Thelma Todd Titles by H. M. two-reelers vaudeville William Terhune